1. Prerequisites ---------------- You will need an entropy (randomness) source. If your OS has arc4random or getentropy then that is ideal. Otherwise, OpenNTPD will use its builtin arc4random implementation, which is also part of the LibreSSL project. 2. Building / Installation -------------------------- If you have checked this source using Git, follow these initial steps to prepare the source tree for building: 1. ensure you have the following packages installed: automake, autoconf, git, libtool, bison 2. run './autogen.sh' to prepare the source tree for building or run './dist.sh' to prepare a tarball. To install OpenNTPD with default options: ./configure make make install This will install the OpenNTPD binary in /usr/local/sbin, configuration files in /usr/local/etc. To specify a different installation prefix, use the --prefix option to configure: ./configure --prefix=/opt make make install Will install OpenNTPD in /opt/{etc,sbin}. You can also override specific paths, for example: ./configure --prefix=/opt --sysconfdir=/etc/ntp make make install This will install the binaries in /opt/sbin, but will place the configuration files in /etc/ntp. OpenNTPD always uses Privilege Separation (ie the majority of the processing is done as a chroot'ed, unprivileged user). This requires that a user, group and directory to be created for it. The user should not be permitted to log in, and its home directory should be owned by root and be mode 755. If you do "make install", the Makefile will create the directory with the correct permissions and will prompt you for the rest if required. If, however, you need to perform all of these tasks yourself (eg if you are moving the built binaries to another system) then you will need to do something like the following (although the exact commands required for creating the user and group are system dependant): On most Linux and BSD systems, something like should work: groupadd _ntp useradd -g _ntp -s /sbin/nologin -d /var/empty -c 'OpenNTP daemon' _ntp mkdir -p /var/empty chown 0 /var/empty chgrp 0 /var/empty chmod 0755 /var/empty /var/empty here is a chroot directory used by ntpd for privilege separation of the DNS and NTP processes. This directory should not contain any files, must be owned by root, and must not be group or world-writable. NOTE: If you installed a previous OpenNTPD release and created a /var/empty/ntp directory, please delete the /var/empty/ntp directory and adjust the _ntp user's home directory to point to /var/empty instead. This is important because, if you have any other daemons that also use /var/empty as a home directory, they will all have an empty privilege separation directory. As of OS X 10.10, something like this should work similarly (thanks to jasper@ for suggesting) dscl . create /Users/_ntp dscl . create /Users/_ntp UserShell /sbin/nologin # Prevent user from showing up on the login screen dscl . delete /Users/_ntp AuthenticationAuthority # Arbitrarily chosen UID that was free dscl . create /Users/_ntp UniqueID 400 dscl . create /Users/_ntp PrimaryGroupID 400 dscl . create /Users/_ntp RealName "OpenNTPD user" dseditgroup -o create _ntp dscl . append /Groups/_ntp GroupMembership _ntp There are a few options to the configure script in addition to the ones provided by autoconf itself: --with-privsep-user=[user] Specify unprivileged user used for privilege separation. The default is "_ntp". --with-privsep-path=path ntpd will always use the home directory of the privsep user to chroot to, but specifying this parameter will change the post-installation checks and instructions to match the specified path. --with-cacert=[path] Specify the CA certificate location for HTTPS constraint validation. Defaults to /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt If you need to pass special options to the compiler or linker, you can specify these as environment variables before running ./configure. For example: CFLAGS="-O2 " LDFLAGS="-s" ./configure 3. Configuration ---------------- The runtime configuration files are installed by in ${prefix}/etc or whatever you specified as your --sysconfdir (/usr/local/etc by default). If no configuration file exists, the default one is used. The default configuration file uses a selection of publicly accessible "pool" servers (see http://support.ntp.org/bin/view/Servers/NTPPoolServers) 4. Problems? ------------ If you experience problems compiling, installing or running OpenNTPD, please report the problem to the address in the README.md file.